Homebrew Gamecube ISO/GCM Organizer Script

  • Thread starter Thread starter syntax53
  • Start date Start date
  • Views Views 54,435
  • Replies Replies 41
  • Likes Likes 23
What is the path to the folder? Maybe it's too long or has some strange characters in it. Try moving it to like C:\gco
I thought of that too. I named the folder just simply "1".
Untitled.jpg
 
Last edited by noxiousfix,
SOLVED:
So apparently I had to run PowerShell (x86), as opposed to just PowerShell, as admin for this to work. Thank you for your help tho. Much appreciated
 
Last edited by noxiousfix,
i made some improvements to the code, i wanted the isos to be trimmed, and removing code was painful, and modifying things take all the day but i think i got it, if someone wants to check it

maybe it can be more pullish but i'm tired XD

soo the code just trimms the isos before rename it them to game.iso and disc2.iso with their respective name and gameid folder,
 

Attachments

Just made an account to say thanks to Syntax53 for writing this utility and everyone who contributed to help troubleshoot. I was having trouble getting this going but cfjrocha's suggestion did the trick for me:
Run from cmd without admin privileges

I have 50 + .iso files that needed organizing and the utility is organizing folders for me as I write this. Thanks again.

Happy hacking, everyone.
 
Hi all. Hope someone can help me out. Is there a way to REVERSE this process? I want the FILES to be named again with their game name + DISK 2 if need be. Any way this can be accomplished?
 
I ran into a bug presumably with DiscEx that I can only reproduce on one machine and not any others. I managed a whole folder of 313 ISOs and DiscEx only fumbled on one ISO that completed on every other machine. 007 - From Russia with Love (USA) is the disc and it's an original image that I verified against someone else who has the ISO on their computer via SHA-1 and came up golden, but when it was churning through DiscEx and rebuilding the ISO the Folder name was nothing but random symbols, no letters, and had a Disc ID of "888&88" which we all know isn't a valid disc ID. That happened on a machine with a fresh install of Win 10 Pro v2004. The other folder names were completely correct including disc IDs. I have no idea how that one happens but this computer does it. Just wanted to spit this out there for everyone else to absorb. 99.999% of the time it's gotten everything correct but this one last disk rebuild somehow pulled that one out of its own ass.
 
First I want to say thank you because this is awesome! When I run the command it does everything it’s supposed which I’m super grateful for naming all the folders is the most time consuming part but the copied version is failing the md5 and the original isn’t am I doing something wrong?
 
Last edited by patrickINFERNO,
this script is broken for me i try run it as admin without admin in x86 ps and 64bit ps same issue no output no errors the terminal just moves to a new line and does nothing.....
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_24.png
    Screenshot_24.png
    32.2 KB · Views: 170
Just got this to work. I used command prompt without admin as was suggested above.

Great work. I really appreciate it.
 

Site & Scene News

Popular threads in this forum